Bitmain's S23 Pro Shortage Is Reshaping the ASIC Resale Market
Next-gen Antminer delivery timelines have slipped by an average of 11 weeks. Second-hand S21 Pros are trading at a premium. The supply chain story is, as usual, the real story.

Bitmain's Antminer S23 Pro, the company's flagship next-generation ASIC, has slipped in delivery by an average of 11 weeks across recent orders, according to data compiled by ASIC-focused broker Luxor Technologies. The delay is reshaping the second-hand market in ways that favor miners with established fleet-management practices and punish those hoping to upgrade opportunistically.
What is actually going wrong
The delay is not, according to three people familiar with Bitmain's production environment, a single-cause issue. The components are coming from a mix of suppliers whose yields have not kept pace with demand. Specifically:
- TSMC 3nm allocation, where Bitmain competes with AI chip customers for foundry slots
- Power regulation components sourced from Taiwanese specialists with limited surge capacity
- Custom packaging that requires specific CoWoS-equivalent processes that have become bottlenecked
The combination means that Bitmain's production ramp, which was originally planned to hit 2 million S23 Pro units per quarter by mid-2026, is currently running at approximately 60% of the target.
"The ASIC supply chain is, in miniature, the same supply chain that builds the Nvidia H-series. We are competing with the AI build-out for the same subcomponents." — Irene Gao, head of research at Luxor
The secondary market effect
The immediate effect is that second-hand S21 Pros, which would normally be getting marked down aggressively in anticipation of the S23 Pro ramp, are holding their value. Luxor's second-hand S21 Pro index is up 8% year-to-date, versus a historical expectation of roughly -15% by this point in a generation's life cycle.
The behavior is rational: miners need operational hashrate now, not in Q3. If the S23 Pro is available in Q3, the S21 Pro is the right stopgap. The price that the market is setting reflects this trade-off.
The competitive dynamics
Bitmain's competitors — MicroBT, Canaan, and the smaller entrants — are not delivering their next-generation units any faster. The underlying supply chain constraints apply across the industry. What varies is the specific mix of delays by manufacturer, which is creating an arbitrage opportunity for sophisticated buyers.
- Bitmain S23 Pro: 11-week average slip
- MicroBT M66S Pro: 7-week average slip
- Canaan Avalon 1566: 14-week average slip
MicroBT has been the modest winner of this cycle, picking up share from buyers who would historically have defaulted to Bitmain. Whether MicroBT's advantage sustains — its supply chain has its own pressures, just at a different node — is a near-term question.
The macro effect on hashrate
The delivery delays are, in the aggregate, slowing the growth rate of network hashrate. The difficulty adjustments over the last three months have been materially softer than would have been expected given the ordering data. The next two adjustments will make the pattern more visible.
For miners already in-fleet, this is good news: softer difficulty growth means higher per-unit revenue. For miners trying to enter the industry at scale, it is bad news — the capital cost of hashrate is elevated relative to the operating economics it produces. The resale market premium on S21 Pros is the specific manifestation of this tension.
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